Say two people are in a car. The (voluntary) passenger gets car sick and tells the driver to pull over.
The (voluntary) driver fails to do so, and the passenger throws up in the car (making an attempt out the window).
Who should clean it up?
Say two people are in a car. The (voluntary) passenger gets car sick and tells the driver to pull over.
The (voluntary) driver fails to do so, and the passenger throws up in the car (making an attempt out the window).
Who should clean it up?
The person who vomited (passenger). It is the driver's fault that the vomit is inside the car, but it's still the passenger's vomit. It'd be gross to make the driver clean it.
Depends on the circumstances.
Was the driver unable to pull over? If so, it really isn't their fault.
If the driver failed to pull over because he was being an [BEEP] about it then he should clean it up. All other instances, I think the passenger should. It's his vomit after all.
This is a Deep Thoughts question...
I would clean up my own vomit regardless of the circumstances
http://youtu.be/zSgiXGELjbc
"A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunrise, but a galaxy rise
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
The rising of the milky way"
"The sky calls to us
If we do not destroy ourselves
We will one day venture to the stars" -Carl Sagan
Depends on why they couldn't pull over and how sick the person was - but ick
life---> <---me
Maybe both can chip in and clean it up
“When you stop blaming others for where you are in life, that is when you can start to manifest your dream life!”
― Stephen Richards
I would probably clean up my own vomit - unless the driver was being an asshat on purpose.
Haha, Bob. I thought that said chin.
If the driver didn't want to pull over, so the person could vomit, I don't see why the driver shouldn't clean it up. To me, it's not a matter of the person who vomited has to clean it up. The driver has no excuse for not pulling over unless the driver couldn't at that moment. Otherwise, I'd make the driver clean it up. It would be the driver's fault for not simply pulling over. The least the driver could do is clean it up.